MARSH HAWK REVIEW FALL 2018 Edited by Eileen R. Tabios CONTENTS Mark Young The Trafficante ficcione—Part One Les magasins sont vides to conceptualize time Irene Willis The Secret at the Back of the CupBoard Peter Vanderberg Holy Hour: Sext Lynne Thompson As Moon First Person Susan Terris Alice, Always Alice Bad Seedling, 1929 Ghost Note Eileen R. Tabios Witnessed in the Convex Mirror: Rape WardroBe Witnessed in the Convex Mirror: ABorted Daguerreotype John Simonds Water Bearers Mara Adamitz Scrupe we too beneath the trees/ after Corot in love Barry Schwabsky An Inclusive Disjunction Wretches of the Earth Something to Forget Me By Susan M. Schultz Three from “I want to write an honest sentence” Janice LoBo Sapigao Bed bug bites Second Generation E. San Juan, Jr. ANG PASAHERONG SALAMANDER Randy Prunty Shut your hands Barbara Jane Reyes Love Poem Written in the Golden State Paul Pines FISH MAGIC [I who have spoken the world] Entrance to the Underworld Naomi Buck Palagi River reflex angle Gwynn O’Gara SUMMER SUNG David O’Connell What Are You Doing With Your Life? Geoffrey O’Brien Clown Hour Horacio Salgan Rich Murphy Word and Deed Michelle Murphy Turn Relativity Once Removed Tale Daniel Morris The Ballad of Mr. Traveling Newspaper Sandy McIntosh Meeting Proust’s Granddaughter at Canio’s, Sag Harbor Tricia McCallum Face Value Out There Agnes Marton School Holiday Cuba Libre Mary Mackey When Jaguars Licked Salt From My Hands Army Ants The Burning World Hank Lazer N33P8 Amy Grace Lam From “AMERICA: another name for opportunity”: $$ From “AMERICA: another name for opportunity”: $$$ Basil King A balance that is of itself a tapestry Burt Kimmelman Film Noir Sherry Kearns What Paul Said The Solitary Elms George Kalamaras The Battles of the Twelve Animals Jacqueline Jules Two Goldfish Paul Ilechko Long Distance Lullaby Michael Hardin Babel Grace Grafton After hearing that a man opened fire on a crowd Anne Gorrick [Athena]: Dew Gathering [Ares]: as though a sudden wind had gutted the stars [Apollo]: the carer of herds and flocks / A wreath Kirk Glaser Inheritance of Fire RoBert GibB ON THE ROAD Danny Gallardo BUY-BUST Thomas Fink OFFICIAL BIO Thomas Fink and Maya D. Mason ALMOST MAGNIFICENT Carol Dorf The UFO Shira Dentz Sing to me, sing to me too Are you up for being the comma tonight Aileen I. Cassinetto A Day at the Museum with a Poet The Cabinet of the World and the Journeys of Women Tom Beckett The true fiction Ryan Bayless And Ivy Alvarez Nagkatagisan ang tarehong talim Nahuhulog ang katawan Nakasandal sa pader MARK YOUNG The Trafficante ficcione — Part One Joe Trafficante, the youngest son of a Mafia Don, so fell in love with Cuba when he accompanied his father on a pre-Second World War trip to investigate the potential of Havana as a possible Base for future Family operations that he renounced his heritage & became a sea-turtle fisherman. It was a quiet But satisfying life. He married, had children. He sold the meat from his catch in the local marketplace, held on to the turtle shell until he had enough carapaces to take to Havana to trade with the international Brokers for what he considered not luxuries But necessities to improve the quality of his family's life — cloth Better than was woven locally, metal cooking & eating utensils, ropes & fishing nets & harpoons. His family accompanied him occasionally, &, in one of those Bitter ironies of life, his youngest son, attracted to the glamour of the faux gaslit gamBling parlours that were Beginning to proliferate, decided to remain Behind & Become a croupier. The father, rememBering his own past, gave no external show of disappointment. His fishing trips Became longer. He went out further, leaving Behind the other Boats from his village, though they were with him on the day he saw the giant of all sea turtles, & they were close enough to see him throw a net over it & then try to tire it By forcing it to drag the Boat. It was a standard practice with two variations of the same ending, a return some hours later with turtle & with net, or without both. This time, however, the ending was different. Trafficante did not return, & the local fable that grew about the giant turtle that drew him to his death achieved a measure of concealed fame when it was later heard By a visiting Yanqui writer who used its core as the Basis for a story, with the slow-paced turtle replaced by a fast fish. Les magasins sont vides If you want to feel good But you’re feeling bad, salvation will automatically convert any pre-school playground into a rastered image of either rolling open grasslands or a forest with lots of trees. The associated housing features full insulation, & the showing is done through lenses shaped from a tinted plastic sheet. It mightn't offer a complete answer, but it still goes a long way towards getting things started. Usually ships the next business day. Sorry, this product is not available. to conceptualize time Forgotten artifacts made from the finest quality silicon carbide stones are being cooked or warmed inside the rice cooker. The extracts are more than lucid, since the phase portrait indicates they've bounded solutions. Everything fuses. Or, mayBe, it's just that everyone lined up for a turn at the switch merges into the one person. Them. & me. Themey, you might say. The things we say to ourselves! My doctor addresses herself to the best yoga positions to aid fertility. Escape peaks are small. I miss being touched. IRENE WILLIS The Secret at the Back of the Cupboard New York City, 1939 The thing you are most afraid to write, write that. —Nayyirah Waheed Why wouldn't it be better to hide inside my mother's secret? Why wouldn't it be better to stay with her in the box at the back of the cupBoard with the matzoh and the kosher salt, away from the cleaning woman's and the janitor's scorn? Why wouldn't it be better not to see that look on their faces and the turning away? I read once of a Christmas tree hung with images of dead Jews in a German living-room. In those days we were hiding from Vannie, our German housekeeper in New York. Later we hid from my mother's Irish second husBand. Don't tell anyone, my mother said of the secret place she led me to. Don't ever tell, she said, breaking a piece of matzoh and dipping it into her saccharin-laced coffee. As she sipped and stirred, I listened. Eight years old, nine, thirteen and later still. I can tell what you are, said the woman I beat out of a parking space in a crowded suburban lot just by looking at you. I was so afraid, so sure I knew what she meant that I didn't have the guts to ask. I should have said, What? What am I? to hear her say whatever, but I couldn't. Better to stay in the box in the cupBoard with my mother's secret. And now her ashes, heavier than I knew, with their bits of bone, in a box at the back of my closet. PETER VANDERBERG Holy Hour: Sext Beloved, I lose my way long before mid-day. Parables fall like stones on a dry riverbed. My youngest son wants everything. I answer, No, be quiet. Leave me alone. He responds, I love you. I want a new commandment, clear instruction (try love one another). Something more complex perhaps? Try parable. There once was a man who had two sons. The youngest took his inheritance & left home... If I say O, Lord & pray while watching the maple’s subtle gestures, sun-shade patterns, birds mating, wasp at the sap, is this your answer? Is every sound & seen thing your response? When I pray, is it you praying? If today you hear my voice...but this voice, Lord, is it my own, in the desert, or yours, calling from mirage? LYNNE THOMPSON As Moon recalling Stevie Wonder As Mississippi is to disaster or nature is to umBrella As yes to a secret river the moon of women is to fishermen As humility is to slander and as shadow is to performance your hands to a single night are as the poor are to love, Lord Or, there could be equally mystifying comBinations: disaster vs. slander, fishermen in shadow and the secret river performing. But always, always, there is a moon of women and the poor Being love, and just as rich. First Person A sentence Begins with he and Before it ends: hyacinth and seashore where time is a rubBer Band and up is always upended. Sentence wants—eventually— to Paragraph, to run wild with Johnnie Walker Red, to go for the prison-Break. Not once does sentence say love or concede to fixed seasons: no fire or Baby Bird, neither famine nor the happy ending. Just Sentence. Erect. On both of her legs. SUSAN TERRIS from FAMILIAR TENSE. ALICE, ALWAYS ALICE The long hair, the headBand and the grinning cat. A knight, like Quixote, who keeps sliding off his horse. Still, she is oBsessed with the real sense that everything she attempts will fail. All those index cards and notes, and she's again Alice throwing the deck in the air, declaring they're a useless pack of nothing. And yet, in the shadows of the house, in her room, in her head, she considers possibilities. All risk holds the possibility for failure.
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